Light-Duty Vehicle Greenhouse Gas Standards for Automotive Research Management Briefing Seminar...

21
Light-Duty Vehicle Greenhouse Gas Standards Center for Automotive Research Management Briefing Seminar August 4, 2015

Transcript of Light-Duty Vehicle Greenhouse Gas Standards for Automotive Research Management Briefing Seminar...

Light-Duty Vehicle Greenhouse Gas StandardsCenter for Automotive Research Management Briefing Seminar

August 4, 2015

U.S. GHG/Fuel Economy standards provide significant benefits to climate, oil, consumers

2

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

450

500

1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030

GH

G E

mis

sion

s (gr

ams/

mile

)

Model Year

Year-over-year improvements

Midterm Evaluation

163 g/mi CO2

54.5 mpg(if all reductions

from fuel economy)

What does the future hold … Empty Shelf or Smorgasbord?

“Yet maintaining the current pace of emissions reductions will be challenging because automakers have exhausted available technologies to reduce emissions, leaving “nothing sitting on the shelf” Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, Automotive News, March 26, 2015

3

?OR

“We’ve got a whole smorgasbord or buffet of technology that can be implemented”

Mark Reuss, GM President of North America, Automotive News, February 5, 2011

Auto industry ranks 3rd largest sector for global R&D investment

Source: Booz & Co.

4

Auto R&D Budget > $100 Billion/year(>$270 Million/day)

BCG report: Fuel economy standards are spurring auto innovation

5

Accelerating Innovation: New Challenges for Automakers (January 2014)

“Regulatory and marketplace demands with respect to fuel efficiency, connectivity, and safety … may well herald a new golden age of automotive innovation.”

“Consumers cite innovation – generally in key areas such as connectivity, safety, and fuel economy – as an important consideration in their purchase decision.”

Thompson Reuters lists Fuel Economy among the 5 “hottest areas” of automotive innovation

6

“Technology is most certainly playing a key role

in developing next generation automobiles

that will be more fuel efficient, safer, and fun to

drive.”

Powertrain suppliers have a key role – and opportunity – to lead innovation

7

Half of the 2015 PACE awards (7 of 14) went to supplier innovations to improve fuel economy

"A new level of efficiency is being achieved with basic science -- new materials and electronics" J. Ferron, Director of Judging, PACE Awards

Half of the Global Automotive Innovation Challenge awards (6 of 12) were also related to fuel economy technologies

sponsored by SAE, MIT Alliance of MI, and NextEnergy

GHG Compliance … Good News So Far

8

Automakers beat standards first two years; widespread use of credit flexibilities

250

255

260

265

270

275

280

285

290

295

300

305

2012 2013

GHG

(gra

ms/

mile

)

Model Year

ComplianceTarget

Standard

11 g/mileLower than Standard

12 g/mileLower than Standard

Vehicles are meeting future standards with a variety of powertrains – mostly gasoline

More than 1.3 million MY 2015 vehicles are already meeting

future standards for MY 2020 or beyond

9

MY 2015 Fleet Volume That Meets MY 2020 Standards

Many of today’s top-selling vehicles* can already meet future standards

10

*At least one variant of vehicle model

2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025

Ford Focus SFEHyundai SonataHonda Civic HF

Mazda 6Jeep Renegade

Honda CR-VNissan Rouge

Subaru OutbackChevy Silverado

Ram 1500Ford F-150

25 TRUCK configurations meet 2020 or later

26 SUV configurationsmeet 2020 or later

63 CAR configurations meet 2020 or later

11

Trucks SUVs Cars

Ford

F-1

50

Ram

150

0

Chev

y Si

lver

ado

Suba

ru O

utba

ck

Nis

san

Roug

e

Hond

a CR

-V

Jeep

Ren

egad

e

Maz

da 6

Hond

a Ci

vic

HF

Hyun

dai S

onat

a

Ford

Foc

us S

FE

Engine

Diesel X

Turbocharging X X X X

High Compression Atkinson X

GDI X X X X X X

Cylinder Deactivation X

Stop-start X

Transmission8+ Speed Transmissions X

CVT X X X X

Road LoadsMass Reduction* X X X

Tires** X X X X X X

Aero** X X X X X

Vehicles are meeting future standards with a variety of technologies

*compared to MY2008 curb weight** Top 25% of class + other active/passive features

Manufacturers are aggressively adopting technology

12

NAS Report on Fuel Economy Technologies

Comprehensive study – good early input to MTE process

Affirmed that 2025 standards can be met through advanced gasoline vehicle technologies

Many recommendations in line with our research plan already underway, others help prioritize

13

MYTHS

Standards ignore consumer choice

Low gasoline prices threaten compliance

Low HEV/EV/PHEV sales mean 2025 standards can’t be met

Footprint-based standards designed to preserve consumer choice

Industry is complying as sales are booming

If fleet mix changes, standards adjust

EPA standards are performance-based – no technology mandate

EPA projected – and NAS reaffirmed –compliance largely from gasoline vehicles

14

Midterm Evaluation – Overview Energy

Environment

Consumers

Market

Economics

Infrastructure

Technology

• Technical review of longer term standards for 2022-2025

• In coordination with NHTSA and CARB

• EPA’s decision could go one of 3 ways: Standards remain same; more

stringent; less stringent

15

Factors

Midterm Evaluation – Technology Assessment

• Advanced technology assessment

• Mass reduction feasibility/cost study

• Cost teardowns

• Modeling tools

• Collaboration: NHTSA, CARB, DOE, Canada

16

Midterm Evaluation – Powertrain Benchmarking

17

• Testing 23 vehicles/engines across a wide range of powertrains and segments

Cars, SUVs, pickups Naturally aspirated and boosted engines Gasoline and diesel I4 and V6 engines 6 and 8+ speed AT/DCT transmissions and CVTs

Midterm Evaluation – Market Research

• Vehicle sales • Fleet mix changes (cars v. trucks)• Technology penetration in fleet• Consumer satisfaction surveys• Automotive reviews

18

Automotive Reviewers Like Fuel Economy Technologies EPA study finds 4 out of 5 mentions

of FE technologies in auto reviews have positive or neutral ratings

Most positives (80-100%): active aero, mass reduction, cylinder deactivation, LEDs, GDI, turbocharging

Most negatives (~30%): CVTs and stop-start

But no universal issues with technologies -- some manufactures implementing better than others

19

Midterm Evaluation Timeline

20

Going forward

Extensive stakeholder outreach

Data-driven

Transparent: we’ll share results of technical work along the way

www.epa.gov/otaq/climate/mte.htm

21